Chelsea's Eden Hazard to Paris Saint-Germain: Smart or Not Smart?

Chelsea's Eden Hazard, 23, will incessantly be linked with moves away from west London. When you possess the rare talent the Belgian international does, it's easy to comprehend why the Real Madrids and Paris Saint-Germains of the world would want you in their starting XIs.

Express' Ben Jefferson noted the Blues' winger received interest from PSG, and has entertained the idea of playing at the Santiago Bernabeu, but remains focused on his Chelsea duties.

Denis Doyle/Getty Images

Gareth Bale is one of many who've left great situations for the clean kit of Real Madrid.

Playing for Real Madrid is an understandable emotion, as they are the diamond club in world football.

Los Merengues' white shirt represents tradition, trophies and excellence—so Hazard imagining himself in a Madrid kit seems more than logical.

The highly sought-after Belgium international had a host of clubs chasing his signature, but opted for Chelsea after former Blues forward [Didier] Drogba contacted fellow Ivorian Gervinho, who was Hazard's teammate at Lille at the time, to help pave the way from northern France to west London.

Whether by the lure of Roman Abramovich's billions, Didier Drogba's wishes or the want to play for the European champions, Hazard elected Stamford Bridge in any event; as winning the Europa League surely wasn't on his "then-I'll-leave-London" checklist, Hazard still has something to prove for his current club.

While Metro's headline is rather hyperbolic—as Mourinho was dealing in impossible hypotheticals—it goes to prove how highly coveted Hazard and Oscar have become in less than 24 months at Stamford Bridge.

If the Parisians want the duo, they'll be forced into breaking UEFA's Financial Fair Play regulations, which was the point Mourinho attempted to make with his £300 million comment.

Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images

Money can assist normally sane people into making rash decisions—like 300 million pounds worth.

Knowing well the stupidity which takes over clubs with stockpiles of cash (see Fernando Torres and Andriy Shevchenko), Chelsea would do well to entertain any offer for a player on their roster but selling is another notion altogether.

Football—as we often forget—is primarily a business. With Hazard's age and talent level, he's more valuable to Chelsea in blue than any other colour. Hazard's current appraisal (£39.5 million via TransferMarkt) wouldn't come close to the branding interests he would help market or the merchandise his last name would help shift.

In many respects, Chelsea would be foolish to sell the Belgian at this stage in his career, unless—as Mourinho suggested—the figured was so outlandish (£100 million plus) Chelsea were compelled by logic and/or common sense to let their talisman leave.

Which would you rather see happen?

Eden Hazard remains at Chelsea for the duration of his careerEden Hazard is sold for £75 millionBoth Eden Hazard and Oscar sold for £150 millionSubmit Votevote to see results

Which would you rather see happen?

Eden Hazard remains at Chelsea for the duration of his career

65.4%

Eden Hazard is sold for £75 million

15.7%

Both Eden Hazard and Oscar sold for £150 million

18.9%

Total votes: 1,696

To answer the title question: "Eden Hazard to Paris Saint-Germain: Smart or Not Smart?"

Selling Hazard to a European competitor seems sour—shipping him before he's reached his prime feels even more disgusting from a Chelsea perspective. The Blues have at least six players who need to be sold or released in the next five months, Hazard isn't among that lot.

The Belgian winger should be the cornerstone of Mourinho's second west London project, not its building fund.